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Half of world's forest species at risk: UN
by Staff Writers
Rome (AFP) June 03, 2014


Japan firefighters douse forest blaze near industrial site
Tokyo (AFP) June 03, 2014 - Firefighters in western Japan battled for more than six hours Tuesday to contain a forest fire that threatened a nearby industrial complex housing fuel tanks.

No one was injured in the fire, which destroyed about seven hectares (17 acres) of forest in the city of Aioi on the Seto Inland Sea coast, the local fire station said in a press release.

Six helicopters, two of them from the defence forces, and about 30 fire trucks joined the operation to put out the blaze which started at around 10:00 am (0100 GMT) and was extinguished by late afternoon.

The fire at one point came within 20 metres (66 feet) of an industrial area where flammable fuels are stored before receding, an official at the Aioi fire station said by telephone.

The cause of the fire was yet to be determined.

Although Japan has many forest-covered mountains, large blazes are uncommon.

Half of the world's forest species are at risk from climate change and farming, the United Nations warned on Tuesday, as it called for "urgent action" to manage them better.

In its first global study of forest genetic resources, the UN's Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) said woodland was shrinking fastest in Brazil, Indonesia and Nigeria.

"Forests provide food, goods and services, which are essential to the survival and well-being of all humanity," the FAO's forestry director Eduardo Rojas-Briales said in a statement.

"These benefits all rely on safeguarding the rich store of the world's forest genetic diversity, which is increasingly at risk."

The report found that around half of the 8,000 reported species and subspecies were perceived as being endangered.

The ten countries that lost the most forest area between 1990 and 2010 were Brazil, Indonesia, Nigeria, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Democratic Republic of Congo, Myanmar, Bolivia, Venezuela and Australia, it said.

FAO said biodiversity boosted both the productivity and nutritional value of forest products like leafy vegetables, honey, fruits, seeds, nuts, roots, tubers and mushrooms.

Genetic diversity also protects forests from pests and ensures they can "adapt to changing environmental conditions, including those stemming from climate change", the FAO said.

The FAO called for more efforts to raise awareness of the importance of biodiversity and to combat invasive species, as well as the development of national seed programmes to ensure the availability of genetically-appropriate tree seeds.

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